Third book in the Ellen and Geoffrey Mystery series, Ghost Walk is scheduled for publication fall 2016.
Geoff is thrilled at the chance to visit his old friend and mentor Savion Gage, especially for the occasion of their shared daughter Carrie’s wedding. Riverrun is a working plantation in the South Carolina Low Country, also something of an asylum run by the inmates.
Carrie is marrying Swee-T, a rap star recently turned into a lawyer. The week between her bridal shower and wedding promises to be a wonderful vacation and an entertainment and a kind of homecoming, as the hospitality of the great house opens to dozens of guests.
But Charleston’s infamous Ichabod killer comes uninvited to the party, and Geoffrey and the members of the household and all the guests must work together to unravel a fatal tangle of hidden histories.
Tell me what you think.
#1 by Todd Mcleay on 20 August 14 - 11:28 am
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Wow, awesome blog format! How long have you ever been running a blog for?
You make running a blog look easy.
The overall style of your website is excellent,
as well as the content!
#2 by Bud on 11 October 14 - 9:11 pm
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Had the blog for a couple of years now. It takes a while to get control of the elements, one of those start-and-keep-at-it things.
#3 by berry f on 30 October 12 - 8:25 am
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I don’t even know how I ended up here. And I do not recognise who you might be, but certainly you’re going to a famous blogger in the event you aren’t already. Cheers!
#4 by Mikkalajnahc on 25 October 12 - 12:34 am
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Amazing! This blog looks just like my old one! It’s on a entirely different subject but it has pretty much the same layout and design. Outstanding choice of colors! Are you using WordPress for your site platform? I’m new to the blog world, trying to get started and set up my own. Do you need any coding expertise to make your own blog? Any help would be really appreciated! Do you use Twitter? I’d like to follow you if that would be okay. I’m definitely enjoying your blog and look forward to new posts. With having so much written content do you ever run into any problems of plagerism or copyright infringement? My blog has a lot of unique content I’ve either created myself or outsourced but it looks like a lot of it is popping it up all over the internet without my authorization. Do you know any methods to help protect against content from being stolen? I’ve recently been searching for information for ages and yours is the best I have discovered so far. However, what in regards to the conclusion, are you positive in regards to the source? Wonderful points altogether, you simply gained a brand new reader.
#5 by aleon on 23 October 12 - 11:21 am
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Howdy! This is my first visit to your blog! We are a collection of volunteers and starting a new project. Your blog provided us beneficial information to work on. You have done an outstanding job!
#6 by Stan on 22 June 13 - 5:25 am
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I had a rather hard time choosing just one type of physician I would want to work for. So many of them fascinate me, and with me not really going into any medical field other than support, I never gave this any thought in the past. After reading the list, I am more favorable of working for a neonatologist. It is difficult to think about how neonatologist physicians sometimes have the most difficult job in the world, but I can only imagine how amazing it would be to be a part of saving a baby’s life. I had a coworker once whose baby was born at 36 weeks, and her baby had a lot of heart and lung problems. There were concerns about whether or not they would ever fully develop once she had him, but after many months in the NICU, and many scares that happened during it, the doctors were able to save him and he is now a very healthy 5 year old. It is because of that I have a higher interest in the neonatologist field.I hate to say which type of physician I would care less to work for, and it is because I worry that many will take it the wrong way. When I was 16, I used to help my mom at an assisted living home as a caregiver. We would get to work at 7:00 A.M. every morning to prepare breakfast for four of the elderly men and women that we were caring for. We would then make sure that all bedding was changed, rooms were cleaned, meals were prepared, and appointments were handled. We worked 12 hour days, and they were always grueling. The owner of the home made sure that everyone had their medicine and made it to their doctor appointments on time. However, she was more worried about getting paid for her services than actually helping the elderly. She would yell at them if they did something wrong, and even call them terrible names. My mom reported her and we both quit our job, but it has always left a sting in my heart since then. It is because of my experience with that situation that I do not think I could ever work for a gerontologist. I know that the situations would be much different, but ever since my experience with caring for elderly individuals it is very hard for me to think about assisting a physician in geriatrics because I worry that someone else might treat the elderly in the same way the owner of the home did. I am a firm believer that the elderly deserve the ultimate care and comfort when going through any treatment and aging in general, but I do not think I could ever work in that environment again.
#7 by Bud on 11 July 13 - 10:57 pm
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I think you have your own novel going on here. But it’s an odd way and place to tell it. Care given, care taken, thanks for sharing.
#8 by Daphne on 11 July 12 - 4:07 am
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you are a great writer, i hope someday i will write as well as you do.
#9 by Bud Crawford on 26 June 12 - 6:31 pm
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No, no. Not yet a grave sight.
Interesting how primal the core olympic sports are. Long-distance running was a hunting tactic (something we do better than other species); javelin and discus, also for hunting and battle.
#10 by Sibyl Smirl on 26 June 12 - 12:55 pm
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@Dirce, apparently the “great site” has died.
I suspect the first sport played ever was the footrace, with the prize being continued life. Probably the second was shot-put, targets other humans, apes, or animals.
#11 by Dirce on 21 May 12 - 10:20 am
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great site.
#12 by ShArkyGurlGT on 16 March 12 - 4:44 pm
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That topic is constantly bothering me. If anybody is capable of answering this question, then I would be very grateful 🙂 Then what do you think ? What was the first sport played ever? Thanks for constructive information 🙂
#13 by Bud Crawford on 16 March 12 - 5:28 pm
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Easy. The use of nonsequitors to bemuse and annoy. Random the verb.